In particular it seems very plausible that I would respond by actively seeking out a predictable dark room if I were confronted with wildly out-of-distribution visual inputs, even if I’d never displayed anything like a preference for predictability of my visual inputs up until then.
When I had a stroke, and was confronted with wildly out-of-distribution visual inputs, one of the first things they did was to put me in a dark predictable room. It was a huge relief, and apparently standard in these kinds of cases.
In particular it seems very plausible that I would respond by actively seeking out a predictable dark room if I were confronted with wildly out-of-distribution visual inputs, even if I’d never displayed anything like a preference for predictability of my visual inputs up until then.
When I had a stroke, and was confronted with wildly out-of-distribution visual inputs, one of the first things they did was to put me in a dark predictable room. It was a huge relief, and apparently standard in these kinds of cases.
I’m better now.